The Central Bank of Nigeria on Tuesday
released four new guidelines for the banking industry, top of which was
an approval for bank customers to make cheque deposits into their
savings accounts.
Prior to this development, bank customers could only make cheque deposits into their current accounts.
The new guidelines were contained in a
circular posted on the CBN website and signed by the Director, Banking
and Payment System, Mr. Dipo Fatokun.
The circular, which was directed to banks and other financial institutions, was dated July 28, 2016.
Aside from this approval, the CBN also
ordered banks and other financial institutions to remove fixed interest
rate on credit cards.
The central bank directed the banks to henceforth begin to embed customers’ Bank Verification Numbers on their payment cards.
It also ordered the banks to discontinue
actual address verification as a condition for account opening for
customers with the BVN.
In approving cheque deposits into savings accounts, the apex bank limited the daily deposit to only N2m per customer in a day.
The CBN said the new guidelines were meant to strengthen the payment system and the banking sector.
The circular, with reference number
BPS/DIR/GEN?CIR/03/005, read, “The Central Bank of Nigeria, in
furtherance of its efforts at strengthening the Nigerian payment system,
hereby issues the following directives: the removal of fixed interest
on credit cards; and discontinuation of actual address verification in
account openings for customers with the Bank Verification Number.
“Banks should begin to embed the BVN on
all payment cards issued henceforth to facilitate off-line BVN
verification and biometric-based customer authentication in such payment
devices as the Automated Teller Machines, Point of Sale Terminal,
kiosks etc.
“Savings account customers with the BVN
should be allowed to deposit cheques not more than N2m in value into
their savings account per, customer per day. Please, be guided and
ensure strict compliance with the content of this circular.”
In another development, the CBN advised
Nigerians at home and in the Diaspora to beware of the unwholesome
activities of some unlicensed International Money Transfer Operators in
the country.
It said in a statement by its Acting
Director, Corporate Communications, Isaac Okoroafor, that the warning
had become necessary because of the activities of some unregistered
IMTOs, whose modes of operation were detrimental to the Nigerian
economy.
Okoroafor stated, “All financial service
providers in Nigeria, just as in other jurisdictions, are required to
be duly licensed in order to protect both customers and the financial
system as well as to ensure the credibility of financial transactions.
“For the avoidance of doubt, all
licensed International Money Transfer Operators, in line with the CBN
circular on the sale of foreign currency proceeds of July 22, 2016, are
required to remit foreign currencies to their respective agent banks in
Nigeria for disbursement in naira to the beneficiaries, while the
foreign currency proceeds are to be sold to Bureaux De Change operators
for onward retail to end users.
“The Central Bank of Nigeria will,
therefore, not condone any attempt aimed at undermining the country’s
foreign exchange regime.
“Accordingly, members of the public are
advised to beware of the activities of such unregistered IMTOs for the
greater economic good of Nigeria.”
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